Headers

Markdown has support for different levels of headers using the hash sign (#):

# This is the title
Here's some very good boiler plate text. I don't even know what a boiler is, even less a plate.
## This is the subheader
Subheaders are awesome. Even better than you think.
### This is the third level header.
And so on.

Will look like this:

This is the title

Here's some very good boiler plate text. I don't even know what a boiler is, even less a plate.

This is the subheader

Subheaders are awesome. Even better than you think.

This is the third level header.

And so on.

When converted to HTML, the first level header will be a <h1> element, a third level header will be a <h3>, etc. At SimpleEditions there's only one first level header per page, namely the title (in this case, it's "Markdown: An introduction", a bit further up). Therefore, you typically always begin with a second level header (## Like this) when you write your tutorial text.

Quotes

Add a greater-than sign (>) in front of anything you are quoting, and the text will be moved slightly towards the middle.

> "Never increase, beyond what is necessary,
> the number of entities required to explain anything."
> – *William Ockham*

Will look like this:

"Never increase, beyond what is necessary,
the number of entities required to explain anything."
– William Ockham

Note how the name, William Ockham, is surrounded by stars to make it render in italic text.

Further reading

This tutorial only cover the basics of Markdown, but there are a few more tricks available.